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Snoopy and Woodstock decorate brightly colored Easter Eggs in this delightful design featuring the beloved characters from Peanuts and the unique artistry of Jim Shore.

Measures 4.5 in H x 3.75 in W x 4 in L

Perfect for an Easter Basket! This Peanuts collectible is a perfect addition to a Charlie Brown, Snoopy, Peanuts, Charles Schultz collector or anyone who just enjoys Peanuts comics.

In honor of the 2015 Peanuts Movie released November 6th - add this beautiful collectible piece to your Enesco Jim Shore

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Snoopy is a loyal, innocent, imaginative and good-natured beagle who is prone to imagining fantasy lives, including being an author, a college student known as "Joe Cool" and a World War I flying ace. He is perhaps best known in this last alternate persona, wearing an aviator's helmet and goggles and a scarf while carrying a swagger stick.

Snoopy cannot talk, so his thoughts are shown in thought balloons. In the animated Peanuts films and television specials, Snoopy's thoughts are not verbalized; his moods are instead conveyed through growls, sobs, laughter, and monosyllabic utterances such as "bleah" or "hey" as well as through pantomime.

Snoopy's doghouse defies physics, and is shown to be bigger on the inside than the outside. It is also his "airplane."

Snoopy appeared on the October 4, 1950 strip, two days after the first strip. He was called Snoopy for the first time a month later, on November 10. On March 16, 1952his thoughts were first shown in a thought balloon. Snoopy first appeared upright on his hind legs on January 9, 1956, when he was shown ice-skating across a frozen lake.

Despite his history of conflicted loyalties and his inability to remember Charlie Brown's name (he thinks of him as "that round-headed kid"), Snoopy has shown both love and loyalty to his owner. He joins Charlie Brown in walking out of a game of Ha-Ha Herman when Peppermint Patty insults Charlie Brown, unaware that Charlie Brown is within earshot. He also helps Charlie Brown recover his autographed baseball when a bully takes it and challenges Charlie Brown to fight him for it. When Charlie Brown has to stop dedicating himself to making Snoopy happy, Snoopy replies, "Don't worry about it. I was already happy." In The Peanuts Movie, Snoopy remains loyal to Charlie Brown, supporting and caring for him throughout the movie.